Legacy and memory in the southern landscape. Migrant artists and activists change perspective on climate through art.īy Glenis Redmond (November/December 2012) Seven writers and an artist explore the relationship between race and our national parks.Īn Interview with Van Jones (May/June 2006)īeing an activist is as much about the self as it is about problems in the larger world.īy Multiple Artists (November/December 2015) ![]() ![]() Wednesday, June 3: “Whose Parks are These?”Įdited by Carolyn Finney (Summer/Autumn 2016) The way a place changes mirrors the way we ourselves are changing. ![]() In the immediacy of great tragedy, a window of opportunity opens. Now that summer has arrived, we’re putting the Daily Download on hold, but we invite you to continue using this as a resource. Fifty features, Enumerations, poems, and photo essays all ready to print, read, and share. The Daily Download was launched to support educators seeking to enrich lesson plans, parents homeschooling and asking for extra material, and others quarantined at home and craving more stories, more photography, more art at the intersection of people and nature.īy early June, the list grew to fifty articles. Each weekday, we would select one previously print-only article from our forty-year archive and offer it in its original layout as a PDF download. As the world went into lockdown over the pandemic, Orion started the Daily Download.
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